Search/Recent Changes
DBTropes
...it's like TV Tropes, but LINKED DATA!

X-Force (1991) (Comic Book)

 X-Force (1991) (Comic Book)
type
TVTItem
 X-Force (1991) (Comic Book)
label
X-Force (1991) (Comic Book)
 X-Force (1991) (Comic Book)
page
XForce1991
 X-Force (1991) (Comic Book)
comment
X-Force is a 1991 comic book series from Marvel Comics, the first of several books to use the X-Force title. It's a Sequel Series to New Mutants and part of the wider X-Men franchise.After creative control of New Mutants was given to artist Rob Liefeld, with Fabian Nicieza scripting dialogue, Liefeld set about making the series Darker and Edgier, adding several new badass main characters and dropping others, and having team leader Cable reform the team into an "ends justify the means" militant strike force, culminating with its relaunch under the new X-Force title.The lineup retained Cable, Cannonball and Boom-Boom, while adding Warpath (formerly of the rival superpowered team, the Hellions), Feral, Shatterstar and Domino. Siryn was also added to the team within the first five issues.However, Liefeld quickly became frustrated by working with characters he didn't own, and left Marvel to co-found Image Comics in 1992. Nicieza took creative control upon Liefeld's departure and began turning the series into a more natural continuation of New Mutants, including the return of characters Sunspot and Rictor. Cable was temporarily written out and X-Force struck out on their own as independent young adults. When Cable did return, in the Fatal Attractions (Marvel Comics) crossover, he brought a new and less authoritarian leadership style. Feral left the team for good and Dani Moonstar, the former New Mutant, was also reintroduced as a recurring character.Nicieza continued to write up through the Age of Apocalypse storyline of 1995, after which he was replaced by Jeph Loeb. Loeb moved the team back to the Xavier Mansion and had them cooperating much more closely with the X-Men and Charles Xavier, as part of a line-wide initiative to bring all the various X-books closer together. Cannonball was shifted to the X-Men and Caliban joined X-Force; Rictor was also written out, but returned the following year. Boom-Boom also changed her codename to Meltdown.After Loeb's departure in 1997, John Francis Moore took over writing duties and once again began drawing on the characters' long histories as New Mutants and X-Force. Under Moore's long tenure, the team disbanded in the wake of the Operation: Zero Tolerance storyline. The cast was narrowed down to five – Meltdown, Warpath, Siryn, Sunspot and a returning Dani Moonstar – who set off on a roadtrip across America and ultimately established their new base in San Francisco. There, the team took on new member Bedlam and reunited with former members Cannonball and Domino.In 2000, Warren Ellis was brought in as part of the X-Men's line-wide "Revolution" revamp, and reformed X-Force as a covert strike team under the leadership of Pete Wisdom, a character he'd previously introduced in Excalibur. The new creative direction lasted for a year, ending at issue #115.At the same time as writer Grant Morrison began their run on New X-Men, Marvel's new editor-in-chief Joe Quesada recruited writer Peter Milligan and artist Mike Allred to take over X-Force – and they agreed as long as they were free to do absolutely anything they wanted. The result was effectively a completely different series in everything but name from issue #116 onwards, with an entirely new cast of characters and new premise. The new X-Force was a government-backed team of publicity-hungry superheroes with a severe case of Anyone Can Die, who had blatantly stolen the name from the original team. The series ended at issue #129 but the concept continued, relaunching as X-Statix.An X-Force team led by Deadpool, drawn from the 1991 series cast, makes its big screen debut in Deadpool 2.
 X-Force (1991) (Comic Book)
fetched
2024-03-13T18:16:55Z
 X-Force (1991) (Comic Book)
parsed
2024-03-13T18:16:55Z
 X-Force (1991) (Comic Book)
processingComment
Dropped link to BatmanTheAnimatedSeries: Not a Feature - ITEM
 X-Force (1991) (Comic Book)
processingComment
Dropped link to GunKata: Not a Feature - ITEM
 X-Force (1991) (Comic Book)
processingComment
Dropped link to TheSimpsons: Not a Feature - ITEM
 X-Force (1991) (Comic Book)
processingComment
Dropped link to XFactor: Not a Feature - ITEM
 X-Force (1991) (Comic Book)
processingComment
Dropped link to newmutants: Not a Feature - ITEM
 X-Force (1991) (Comic Book)
isPartOf
DBTropes
 X-Force (1991) (Comic Book) / int_14beeefd
type
Darker and Edgier
 X-Force (1991) (Comic Book) / int_14beeefd
comment
Darker and Edgier: This was the defining characteristic of the comic in the beginning, as compared to its predecessor "New Mutants". This was also the intent of Warren Ellis's run.
 X-Force (1991) (Comic Book) / int_14beeefd
featureApplicability
1.0
 X-Force (1991) (Comic Book) / int_14beeefd
featureConfidence
1.0
 X-Force (1991) (Comic Book)
hasFeature
X-Force (1991) (Comic Book) / int_14beeefd
 X-Force (1991) (Comic Book) / int_17ce80aa
type
All There in the Manual
 X-Force (1991) (Comic Book) / int_17ce80aa
comment
All There in the Manual: Huge chunks of Cable's backstory and origin were only revealed in his ongoing book, once it was launched.
 X-Force (1991) (Comic Book) / int_17ce80aa
featureApplicability
1.0
 X-Force (1991) (Comic Book) / int_17ce80aa
featureConfidence
1.0
 X-Force (1991) (Comic Book)
hasFeature
X-Force (1991) (Comic Book) / int_17ce80aa
 X-Force (1991) (Comic Book) / int_23698fa8
type
Aborted Arc
 X-Force (1991) (Comic Book) / int_23698fa8
comment
Aborted Arc: The fate of the "Externals" story arc once Liefeld left. It was technically resolved... by killing off pretty much everyone involved within the space of a single issue. The Reignfire story was cut off abruptly after Age of Apocalypse, quickly explained as having been resolved off-panel. Again, it was revisited later in the series, but in a clearly different way to what was originally intended. After leaving Camp Verde, the team gets a brand-new awesome base under New York when they take over the vacant Murderworld, formerly the lair of supervillain Arcade. There's a great deal of talk about how the base's location will give them easy access to the city, enable them to possibly attend university or get day jobs, and let them develop personal lives outside of being superheroes. Four issues later the base is unceremoniously blown up and the team is relocated to Xavier Mansion, as isolated from the outside world as ever. The character of 'Adam X The X-Treme' was introduced with much fanfare in the second annual and was heavily hinted to be the third Summers brother... then was mostly forgotten about after Fabian Nicieza left. Stryfe's Strike File mentions the 616 version of Holocaust as a potential threat, but this version is never seen again. Benjamin Russell is genetically identical to Shatterstar. Maybe Shatterstar is really Benjamin Russell. X-Factor #259 ignores this altogether in favor of the earlier origin. A number of character-centric subplots were abandoned when John Francis Moore was replaced by Warren Ellis, and were never properly followed up on by Marvel. These included Siryn being possessed by an evil artifact similar to the villain Malice, the team being stalked by two agents of the Triune Understanding (of whom Meltdown's father was a new convert), Sunspot joining the Hellfire Club as the new Black Rook, Julia Sandoval being reincarnated in a new body, and foreshadowing that Domino would soon die in a devastating future conflict.
 X-Force (1991) (Comic Book) / int_23698fa8
featureApplicability
1.0
 X-Force (1991) (Comic Book) / int_23698fa8
featureConfidence
1.0
 X-Force (1991) (Comic Book)
hasFeature
X-Force (1991) (Comic Book) / int_23698fa8
 X-Force (1991) (Comic Book) / int_351205d2
type
Friends with Benefits
 X-Force (1991) (Comic Book) / int_351205d2
comment
Cable and Domino have a long history, during which they've been everything from genuinely just friends to teammates to Friends with Benefits to fully lovers; currently, they seem to be in a "just friends" phase.
 X-Force (1991) (Comic Book) / int_351205d2
featureApplicability
1.0
 X-Force (1991) (Comic Book) / int_351205d2
featureConfidence
1.0
 X-Force (1991) (Comic Book)
hasFeature
X-Force (1991) (Comic Book) / int_351205d2
 X-Force (1991) (Comic Book) / int_3c3f28a5
type
Blessed with Suck
 X-Force (1991) (Comic Book) / int_3c3f28a5
comment
Blessed with Suck: Cable, potentially the single most powerful telepath and telekinetic in the Marvel Universe, has to use all but a tiny smidge of those powers to keep the techno-virus infesting half his body from devouring the other half.
 X-Force (1991) (Comic Book) / int_3c3f28a5
featureApplicability
1.0
 X-Force (1991) (Comic Book) / int_3c3f28a5
featureConfidence
1.0
 X-Force (1991) (Comic Book)
hasFeature
X-Force (1991) (Comic Book) / int_3c3f28a5
 X-Force (1991) (Comic Book) / int_40df2ec6
type
BigFreakingGun
 X-Force (1991) (Comic Book) / int_40df2ec6
comment
BFG: Cable had a lot of these, and wasn't shy about using them.
 X-Force (1991) (Comic Book) / int_40df2ec6
featureApplicability
1.0
 X-Force (1991) (Comic Book) / int_40df2ec6
featureConfidence
1.0
 X-Force (1991) (Comic Book)
hasFeature
X-Force (1991) (Comic Book) / int_40df2ec6
 X-Force (1991) (Comic Book) / int_4885c04b
type
Road Trip Plot
 X-Force (1991) (Comic Book) / int_4885c04b
comment
Road Trip Plot: After the "Operation: Zero Tolerance" storyline, the remaining members of the team decide to strike out on their own leading to a year long road trip storyline that takes them from New York to their new home in San Francisco.
 X-Force (1991) (Comic Book) / int_4885c04b
featureApplicability
1.0
 X-Force (1991) (Comic Book) / int_4885c04b
featureConfidence
1.0
 X-Force (1991) (Comic Book)
hasFeature
X-Force (1991) (Comic Book) / int_4885c04b
 X-Force (1991) (Comic Book) / int_504a1991
type
Body Horror
 X-Force (1991) (Comic Book) / int_504a1991
comment
Body Horror: Cable is mostly human on his right side, mostly techno-organic on the left. And if it weren't for his powers, he'd be consumed by the TO virus and die.
 X-Force (1991) (Comic Book) / int_504a1991
featureApplicability
1.0
 X-Force (1991) (Comic Book) / int_504a1991
featureConfidence
1.0
 X-Force (1991) (Comic Book)
hasFeature
X-Force (1991) (Comic Book) / int_504a1991
 X-Force (1991) (Comic Book) / int_510619dd
type
Covert Group
 X-Force (1991) (Comic Book) / int_510619dd
comment
Covert Group: During Warren Ellis's run the team was portrayed as a covert group under the leadership of Pete Wisdom, a character originally created by Ellis.
 X-Force (1991) (Comic Book) / int_510619dd
featureApplicability
1.0
 X-Force (1991) (Comic Book) / int_510619dd
featureConfidence
1.0
 X-Force (1991) (Comic Book)
hasFeature
X-Force (1991) (Comic Book) / int_510619dd
 X-Force (1991) (Comic Book) / int_548bd053
type
Guns Akimbo
 X-Force (1991) (Comic Book) / int_548bd053
comment
Guns Akimbo: Domino was particularly fond of this.
 X-Force (1991) (Comic Book) / int_548bd053
featureApplicability
1.0
 X-Force (1991) (Comic Book) / int_548bd053
featureConfidence
1.0
 X-Force (1991) (Comic Book)
hasFeature
X-Force (1991) (Comic Book) / int_548bd053
 X-Force (1991) (Comic Book) / int_590e787c
type
Masked Villains, Unmasked Heroes
 X-Force (1991) (Comic Book) / int_590e787c
comment
Masked Villains, Unmasked Heroes: Cable is unmasked, while his enemy Stryfe is masked. As it turns out, Stryfe is actually a clone of Cable and is wearing a mask to hide his identity.
 X-Force (1991) (Comic Book) / int_590e787c
featureApplicability
1.0
 X-Force (1991) (Comic Book) / int_590e787c
featureConfidence
1.0
 X-Force (1991) (Comic Book)
hasFeature
X-Force (1991) (Comic Book) / int_590e787c
 X-Force (1991) (Comic Book) / int_5d414804
type
Just Friends
 X-Force (1991) (Comic Book) / int_5d414804
comment
Just Friends: Cable and Domino have a long history, during which they've been everything from genuinely just friends to teammates to Friends with Benefits to fully lovers; currently, they seem to be in a "just friends" phase. Warpath falls in love with Siryn, who only regards him as a close friend. Eventually he gets over her and starts dating Risque, which ends badly for all concerned.
 X-Force (1991) (Comic Book) / int_5d414804
featureApplicability
1.0
 X-Force (1991) (Comic Book) / int_5d414804
featureConfidence
1.0
 X-Force (1991) (Comic Book)
hasFeature
X-Force (1991) (Comic Book) / int_5d414804
 X-Force (1991) (Comic Book) / int_6056f853
type
Homoerotic Subtext
 X-Force (1991) (Comic Book) / int_6056f853
comment
Homoerotic Subtext: Deliberately dropped into the series between Shatterstar and Rictor by writer Jeph Loeb.
 X-Force (1991) (Comic Book) / int_6056f853
featureApplicability
1.0
 X-Force (1991) (Comic Book) / int_6056f853
featureConfidence
1.0
 X-Force (1991) (Comic Book)
hasFeature
X-Force (1991) (Comic Book) / int_6056f853
 X-Force (1991) (Comic Book) / int_63719fc4
type
Plot Archaeology
 X-Force (1991) (Comic Book) / int_63719fc4
comment
Plot Archaeology: John Francis Moore's run resolves a lot of the dangling plot threads from Fabian Nicieza's run. Among these were a proper follow-up to the Reignfire story, a reason for why Dani Moonstar had joined the MLF, and revealing who was responsible for massacring Warpath's tribe at Camp Verde.
 X-Force (1991) (Comic Book) / int_63719fc4
featureApplicability
1.0
 X-Force (1991) (Comic Book) / int_63719fc4
featureConfidence
1.0
 X-Force (1991) (Comic Book)
hasFeature
X-Force (1991) (Comic Book) / int_63719fc4
 X-Force (1991) (Comic Book) / int_6411dac8
type
BadassNormal
 X-Force (1991) (Comic Book) / int_6411dac8
comment
Badass Normal: Cable, who despite being a mutant, can't really use his powers on any significant scale without risking death. In lieu of reading people's thoughts and throwing them through the air with his mind, he relies on his...
 X-Force (1991) (Comic Book) / int_6411dac8
featureApplicability
1.0
 X-Force (1991) (Comic Book) / int_6411dac8
featureConfidence
1.0
 X-Force (1991) (Comic Book)
hasFeature
X-Force (1991) (Comic Book) / int_6411dac8
 X-Force (1991) (Comic Book) / int_64229ba5
type
Late Spin-Off Transplant
 X-Force (1991) (Comic Book) / int_64229ba5
comment
Late Spin-Off Transplant: Rictor joins X-Force over a year after the series began.
 X-Force (1991) (Comic Book) / int_64229ba5
featureApplicability
1.0
 X-Force (1991) (Comic Book) / int_64229ba5
featureConfidence
1.0
 X-Force (1991) (Comic Book)
hasFeature
X-Force (1991) (Comic Book) / int_64229ba5
 X-Force (1991) (Comic Book) / int_754df088
type
Put on a Bus
 X-Force (1991) (Comic Book) / int_754df088
comment
Put on a Bus: Rictor and Shatterstar left the team together to go bring down Rictor's family's illegal arms-dealing racket. Around the same time, Caliban was retaken by the forces of Apocalypse.
 X-Force (1991) (Comic Book) / int_754df088
featureApplicability
1.0
 X-Force (1991) (Comic Book) / int_754df088
featureConfidence
1.0
 X-Force (1991) (Comic Book)
hasFeature
X-Force (1991) (Comic Book) / int_754df088
 X-Force (1991) (Comic Book) / int_7a87fa80
type
Animal-Themed Superbeing
 X-Force (1991) (Comic Book) / int_7a87fa80
comment
Animal-Themed Superbeing: Feral as the Darker and Edgier Wolfsbane, although she is a Cat Girl rather than a werewolf.
 X-Force (1991) (Comic Book) / int_7a87fa80
featureApplicability
1.0
 X-Force (1991) (Comic Book) / int_7a87fa80
featureConfidence
1.0
 X-Force (1991) (Comic Book)
hasFeature
X-Force (1991) (Comic Book) / int_7a87fa80
 X-Force (1991) (Comic Book) / int_7aa989ea
type
Token Evil Teammate
 X-Force (1991) (Comic Book) / int_7aa989ea
comment
Token Evil Teammate: Feral. Nobody was very surprised to see her make a Face–Heel Turn in the middle of a battle.
 X-Force (1991) (Comic Book) / int_7aa989ea
featureApplicability
1.0
 X-Force (1991) (Comic Book) / int_7aa989ea
featureConfidence
1.0
 X-Force (1991) (Comic Book)
hasFeature
X-Force (1991) (Comic Book) / int_7aa989ea
 X-Force (1991) (Comic Book) / int_820ac3c5
type
Dysfunction Junction
 X-Force (1991) (Comic Book) / int_820ac3c5
comment
Dysfunction Junction: It's soon acknowledged in-series that Cable deliberately sought out to recruit young people who were damaged and angry. Over time and with each other's help, the team members each become much more well-adjusted – probably the biggest transformation is Warpath, after he gets closure for the Camp Verde massacre.
 X-Force (1991) (Comic Book) / int_820ac3c5
featureApplicability
1.0
 X-Force (1991) (Comic Book) / int_820ac3c5
featureConfidence
1.0
 X-Force (1991) (Comic Book)
hasFeature
X-Force (1991) (Comic Book) / int_820ac3c5
 X-Force (1991) (Comic Book) / int_8da65890
type
Commuting on a Bus
 X-Force (1991) (Comic Book) / int_8da65890
comment
Commuting on a Bus: Sunspot and Rictor, former New Mutants, during Rob Liefeld's run. Sunspot appeared occasionally in association with Gideon, the External; Rictor resurfaced as a member of Weapon Prime. Very shortly after Liefeld left the series, both characters joined X-Force.
 X-Force (1991) (Comic Book) / int_8da65890
featureApplicability
1.0
 X-Force (1991) (Comic Book) / int_8da65890
featureConfidence
1.0
 X-Force (1991) (Comic Book)
hasFeature
X-Force (1991) (Comic Book) / int_8da65890
 X-Force (1991) (Comic Book) / int_927b2f11
type
The Bus Came Back
 X-Force (1991) (Comic Book) / int_927b2f11
comment
The Bus Came Back: Cable, Sunspot, Rictor, Cannonball and Domino are all written out of the series for extended periods before returning as main characters. Rictor and Shatterstar also return for a one-off appearance in an annual two years after they were Put on a Bus together. As "X-Force" is a continuation of "New Mutants", Sunspot, Rictor and Dani Moonstar joining the team could also be regarded as this. The same goes for the guest reappearances by Wolfsbane, Magma, Karma, Douglock, Rusty and Skids.
 X-Force (1991) (Comic Book) / int_927b2f11
featureApplicability
1.0
 X-Force (1991) (Comic Book) / int_927b2f11
featureConfidence
1.0
 X-Force (1991) (Comic Book)
hasFeature
X-Force (1991) (Comic Book) / int_927b2f11
 X-Force (1991) (Comic Book) / int_950bbfa7
type
Take a Third Option
 X-Force (1991) (Comic Book) / int_950bbfa7
comment
Take a Third Option: The team's stance towards humanity, given in issue #19, is referred to as a third option between the "open hand" of Xavier and the "closed fist" of Magneto. Their aim is to protect and defend the freedom of mutants above all else – including the freedom for each mutant to decide for themselves which option to take.
 X-Force (1991) (Comic Book) / int_950bbfa7
featureApplicability
1.0
 X-Force (1991) (Comic Book) / int_950bbfa7
featureConfidence
1.0
 X-Force (1991) (Comic Book)
hasFeature
X-Force (1991) (Comic Book) / int_950bbfa7
 X-Force (1991) (Comic Book) / int_9b1e50bd
type
During the War
 X-Force (1991) (Comic Book) / int_9b1e50bd
comment
During the War: Virtually all of Cable's backstory relates to his battling the forces of Apocalypse a thousand years in the future.
 X-Force (1991) (Comic Book) / int_9b1e50bd
featureApplicability
1.0
 X-Force (1991) (Comic Book) / int_9b1e50bd
featureConfidence
1.0
 X-Force (1991) (Comic Book)
hasFeature
X-Force (1991) (Comic Book) / int_9b1e50bd
 X-Force (1991) (Comic Book) / int_a0a364d5
type
Intimate Lotion Application
 X-Force (1991) (Comic Book) / int_a0a364d5
comment
Intimate Lotion Application: In Issue #81, the team goes to Hawaii and Bobby convinces his girlfriend Tabitha to go surfing with her, but they both end up getting wiped out by the huge waves. Tabitha's narration laments that she'd much rather be lounging in a chair sunbathing at the beach while Bobby rubbed sun lotion on her.
 X-Force (1991) (Comic Book) / int_a0a364d5
featureApplicability
1.0
 X-Force (1991) (Comic Book) / int_a0a364d5
featureConfidence
1.0
 X-Force (1991) (Comic Book)
hasFeature
X-Force (1991) (Comic Book) / int_a0a364d5
 X-Force (1991) (Comic Book) / int_a0db7803
type
It's Personal
 X-Force (1991) (Comic Book) / int_a0db7803
comment
It's Personal: Cable's hatred for Stryfe stems only partly from the fact that Stryfe has killed everyone Cable loved; most of it is from Stryfe's raping and impregnating his wife with a son that Cable had mixed feelings towards at best.
 X-Force (1991) (Comic Book) / int_a0db7803
featureApplicability
1.0
 X-Force (1991) (Comic Book) / int_a0db7803
featureConfidence
1.0
 X-Force (1991) (Comic Book)
hasFeature
X-Force (1991) (Comic Book) / int_a0db7803
 X-Force (1991) (Comic Book) / int_a7a59f31
type
Doppelganger Link
 X-Force (1991) (Comic Book) / int_a7a59f31
comment
Doppelganger Link: Reignfire is a clone of Sunspot and has a one-way telepathic connection with him. He used it to take control of Sunspot and make him attack his friends.
 X-Force (1991) (Comic Book) / int_a7a59f31
featureApplicability
1.0
 X-Force (1991) (Comic Book) / int_a7a59f31
featureConfidence
1.0
 X-Force (1991) (Comic Book)
hasFeature
X-Force (1991) (Comic Book) / int_a7a59f31
 X-Force (1991) (Comic Book) / int_a7defafd
type
Code Name
 X-Force (1991) (Comic Book) / int_a7defafd
comment
Code Name: Played straight, to the point where Cable and Domino's real names weren't revealed for years. Justified in Cable's case, since revealing his name would spoil a pretty juicy plot twist.
 X-Force (1991) (Comic Book) / int_a7defafd
featureApplicability
1.0
 X-Force (1991) (Comic Book) / int_a7defafd
featureConfidence
1.0
 X-Force (1991) (Comic Book)
hasFeature
X-Force (1991) (Comic Book) / int_a7defafd
 X-Force (1991) (Comic Book) / int_a94eaaa4
type
Odd Friendship
 X-Force (1991) (Comic Book) / int_a94eaaa4
comment
Odd Friendship: Rictor develops one with Shatterstar after joining the team. Ultimately they become romantically involved, but only off-panel – it wouldn't be confirmed in canon until more than a decade later in X-Factor (2006).
 X-Force (1991) (Comic Book) / int_a94eaaa4
featureApplicability
1.0
 X-Force (1991) (Comic Book) / int_a94eaaa4
featureConfidence
1.0
 X-Force (1991) (Comic Book)
hasFeature
X-Force (1991) (Comic Book) / int_a94eaaa4
 X-Force (1991) (Comic Book) / int_b2279346
type
RetCon
 X-Force (1991) (Comic Book) / int_b2279346
comment
Retcon: Cable wasn't Scott and Madelyne's son until Chris Claremont and Jim Lee came up with the idea while writing X-Factor #65-68. Executive meddling prevented Nicieza and Lobdell from revealing Stryfe was Nathan Summers and Cable a clone, as Bob Harras wanted Cable to be Nathan, since "having him be the fake would devalue him".
 X-Force (1991) (Comic Book) / int_b2279346
featureApplicability
1.0
 X-Force (1991) (Comic Book) / int_b2279346
featureConfidence
1.0
 X-Force (1991) (Comic Book)
hasFeature
X-Force (1991) (Comic Book) / int_b2279346
 X-Force (1991) (Comic Book) / int_bbfaa837
type
Knight Templar
 X-Force (1991) (Comic Book) / int_bbfaa837
comment
Knight Templar: Cable was very much "ends justify the means" in the beginning; later writers softened him considerably, though it's still not a very good idea to make him mad.
 X-Force (1991) (Comic Book) / int_bbfaa837
featureApplicability
1.0
 X-Force (1991) (Comic Book) / int_bbfaa837
featureConfidence
1.0
 X-Force (1991) (Comic Book)
hasFeature
X-Force (1991) (Comic Book) / int_bbfaa837
 X-Force (1991) (Comic Book) / int_c313d43a
type
True Companions
 X-Force (1991) (Comic Book) / int_c313d43a
comment
True Companions: Developed into this during Fabian Nicieza's run as writer. In particular Warpath references this as the reason why he stays with the team, even though being a superhero doesn't make him happy or fulfilled.
 X-Force (1991) (Comic Book) / int_c313d43a
featureApplicability
1.0
 X-Force (1991) (Comic Book) / int_c313d43a
featureConfidence
1.0
 X-Force (1991) (Comic Book)
hasFeature
X-Force (1991) (Comic Book) / int_c313d43a
 X-Force (1991) (Comic Book) / int_c31adf6a
type
Gun Fu
 X-Force (1991) (Comic Book) / int_c31adf6a
comment
Gun Fu: Domino, though her "luck" power also had a lot to do with it.
 X-Force (1991) (Comic Book) / int_c31adf6a
featureApplicability
1.0
 X-Force (1991) (Comic Book) / int_c31adf6a
featureConfidence
1.0
 X-Force (1991) (Comic Book)
hasFeature
X-Force (1991) (Comic Book) / int_c31adf6a
 X-Force (1991) (Comic Book) / int_c5584f85
type
Artifact Domination
 X-Force (1991) (Comic Book) / int_c5584f85
comment
A number of character-centric subplots were abandoned when John Francis Moore was replaced by Warren Ellis, and were never properly followed up on by Marvel. These included Siryn being possessed by an evil artifact similar to the villain Malice, the team being stalked by two agents of the Triune Understanding (of whom Meltdown's father was a new convert), Sunspot joining the Hellfire Club as the new Black Rook, Julia Sandoval being reincarnated in a new body, and foreshadowing that Domino would soon die in a devastating future conflict.
 X-Force (1991) (Comic Book) / int_c5584f85
featureApplicability
1.0
 X-Force (1991) (Comic Book) / int_c5584f85
featureConfidence
1.0
 X-Force (1991) (Comic Book)
hasFeature
X-Force (1991) (Comic Book) / int_c5584f85
 X-Force (1991) (Comic Book) / int_c75df49a
type
Shout-Out
 X-Force (1991) (Comic Book) / int_c75df49a
comment
Shout-Out: A Bart Simpson poster. Batman: The Animated Series is on a TV monitor.
 X-Force (1991) (Comic Book) / int_c75df49a
featureApplicability
1.0
 X-Force (1991) (Comic Book) / int_c75df49a
featureConfidence
1.0
 X-Force (1991) (Comic Book)
hasFeature
X-Force (1991) (Comic Book) / int_c75df49a
 X-Force (1991) (Comic Book) / int_dbca2c99
type
Red Herring
 X-Force (1991) (Comic Book) / int_dbca2c99
comment
Red Herring: At the start of X-Force, false hints were dropped that Cable and his arch-enemy Stryfe might be the same person (they use a bunch of the same catchphrases, and Stryfe removes his helmet for the first time showing readers that he has the same face as Cable), playing X-Force and the MLF against each other for some reason.
 X-Force (1991) (Comic Book) / int_dbca2c99
featureApplicability
1.0
 X-Force (1991) (Comic Book) / int_dbca2c99
featureConfidence
1.0
 X-Force (1991) (Comic Book)
hasFeature
X-Force (1991) (Comic Book) / int_dbca2c99
 X-Force (1991) (Comic Book) / int_de15a322
type
Tangled Family Tree
 X-Force (1991) (Comic Book) / int_de15a322
comment
The character of 'Adam X The X-Treme' was introduced with much fanfare in the second annual and was heavily hinted to be the third Summers brother... then was mostly forgotten about after Fabian Nicieza left.
 X-Force (1991) (Comic Book) / int_de15a322
featureApplicability
1.0
 X-Force (1991) (Comic Book) / int_de15a322
featureConfidence
1.0
 X-Force (1991) (Comic Book)
hasFeature
X-Force (1991) (Comic Book) / int_de15a322
 X-Force (1991) (Comic Book) / int_de86b894
type
Continuity Drift
 X-Force (1991) (Comic Book) / int_de86b894
comment
Continuity Drift: In issue #25, Cable explains his motives for going to the past, to train Sam and the team to proactively fight against Stryfe and Apocalypse. But Cable ends up leaving the team to face Apocalypse on his own, while the team focuses on other threats until disbanding.
 X-Force (1991) (Comic Book) / int_de86b894
featureApplicability
1.0
 X-Force (1991) (Comic Book) / int_de86b894
featureConfidence
1.0
 X-Force (1991) (Comic Book)
hasFeature
X-Force (1991) (Comic Book) / int_de86b894
 X-Force (1991) (Comic Book) / int_eba6a077
type
Cain and Abel
 X-Force (1991) (Comic Book) / int_eba6a077
comment
Cain and Abel: Cable and his evil clone Stryfe.
 X-Force (1991) (Comic Book) / int_eba6a077
featureApplicability
1.0
 X-Force (1991) (Comic Book) / int_eba6a077
featureConfidence
1.0
 X-Force (1991) (Comic Book)
hasFeature
X-Force (1991) (Comic Book) / int_eba6a077
 X-Force (1991) (Comic Book) / int_ecac4c42
type
Why Won't You Die?
 X-Force (1991) (Comic Book) / int_ecac4c42
comment
Why Won't You Die?: It took Cable several tries to put Stryfe down for the count.
 X-Force (1991) (Comic Book) / int_ecac4c42
featureApplicability
1.0
 X-Force (1991) (Comic Book) / int_ecac4c42
featureConfidence
1.0
 X-Force (1991) (Comic Book)
hasFeature
X-Force (1991) (Comic Book) / int_ecac4c42
 X-Force (1991) (Comic Book) / int_fd189d07
type
Briefer Than They Think
 X-Force (1991) (Comic Book) / int_fd189d07
comment
Briefer Than They Think: Rob Liefeld was only on the book as co-writer for the first year and only on art for the first 9 of those issues. Once he left the book quickly moved away from the three G's (guns, grimaces and grittiness) to more character-based stories culminating in John Francis Moore's Lighter and Softer run.
 X-Force (1991) (Comic Book) / int_fd189d07
featureApplicability
1.0
 X-Force (1991) (Comic Book) / int_fd189d07
featureConfidence
1.0
 X-Force (1991) (Comic Book)
hasFeature
X-Force (1991) (Comic Book) / int_fd189d07
 X-Force (1991) (Comic Book) / int_name
type
ItemName
 X-Force (1991) (Comic Book) / int_name
comment
 X-Force (1991) (Comic Book) / int_name
featureApplicability
1.0
 X-Force (1991) (Comic Book) / int_name
featureConfidence
1.0
 X-Force (1991) (Comic Book)
hasFeature
X-Force (1991) (Comic Book) / int_name
 X-Force (1991) (Comic Book) / int_name
itemName
X-Force (1991) (Comic Book)

The following is a list of statements referring to the current page from other pages.

 X-Force (1991) (Comic Book)
hasFeature
Comic Books of the 1990s / int_a077e22f
 X-Force (1991) (Comic Book)
hasFeature
Double Standard: Rape, Sci-Fi / int_a077e22f
 X-Force (1991) (Comic Book)
hasFeature
Intimate Lotion Application / int_a077e22f
 X-Force (1991) (Comic Book)
hasFeature
Precocious Crush / int_a077e22f